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U.S. House set to kill Keystone-linked bill

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Speaker of the House U.S. Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) answers reporters' questions during a brief news conference on the payroll tax vote outside his office at the U.S. Capitol December 19, 2011 in Washington, DC. Boehner said he expects the House will vote to move the payroll tax holiday and unemployment benefits legislation into conference instead of passing the version sent over by the Senate last weekend.
 

Speaker of the House U.S. Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) answers reporters' questions during a brief news conference on the payroll tax vote outside his office at the U.S. Capitol December 19, 2011 in Washington, DC. Boehner said he expects the House will vote to move the payroll tax holiday and unemployment benefits legislation into conference instead of passing the version sent over by the Senate last weekend.

Photograph by: Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

WASHINGTON - The top U.S. Republican lawmaker on Monday effectively killed a short-term tax break and called on lawmakers to negotiate a full year payroll tax cut extension for 160 million U.S. workers.

"The idea that tax policy can be done two months at a time is the kind of activity we see here in Washington that will put the economy off its track," House Speaker John Boehner told reporters.

Boehner said "I expect that the House (of Representatives) will disagree" with the two-month extension overwhelmingly approved by the Senate during the weekend.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has so far refused to bring the Senate back in to either re-negotiate the tax cut or vote on anything the House manages to pass, imperiling the fate of the tax break.

The House will hold a series of votes after 6 p.m. EDT /2300 GMT on Monday but Boehner said the dispute will need to be resolved in a conference between the two chambers.

Angry Democrats accused Boehner of reneging on a deal brokered by Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell and his Democratic counterpart Reid. The two eked out a modest two-month extension on Friday after failing to break a deadlock over how to pay for the tax break for a full year.

Boehner on Monday denied he had agreed with the short-term extension.

"I made it perfectly clear to Senator Reid and Senator McConnell sometime mid-last week that I would not enter into negotiations with them until the Senate produced a bill," he said. "The Senate produced a bill, we expressed our reservations."

The White House accused Republican members allied with the conservative Tea Party movement of derailing the deal.

"They revolted and the speaker acquiesced to their desires, even when he knows it is not in the best interests of the country," White House spokesman Dan Pfeiffer said on MSNBC.

The Senate passed the measure in an 89-10 vote on Saturday. The House is set to vote on it on Monday but the strong opposition of House Republicans means they will most likely try to amend the Senate bill or seek the negotiations demanded by Boehner.

Either way, it will be difficult to settle differences between the two parties with less than two weeks left before the tax break expires. Without congressional action the tax that workers pay into the Social Security federal retirement program will rise to 6.2 per cent on Jan. 1, from 4.2 per cent.

The end-of-year fight, which many had thought had ended with the Senate deal on Friday, will further deepen widespread perceptions of dysfunction in Washington.

"This just adds to the level of frustration with business as usual in Washington, and the general sense around the country that Congress is playing politics with our economic fate," said Scott Anderson, a senior analyst at Wells Fargo.

Public confidence in Congress has plunged to record lows this year after a series of bitter fights between Democrats and Republicans over spending and taxes brought the government to the brink of a shutdown three times and cost the United States its prized AAA credit rating from Standard & Poor's.

President Barack Obama and his Democratic allies in Congress say continuing the payroll tax break for another year will help spur U.S. the fragile economic recovery.

STICKING POINT

Boehner said on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday that a two-month extension would create uncertainty for workers and employers at a critical time for the economy.

The biggest sticking point for a year-long extension is how to cover the $120 billion in lost revenue to the Social Security Trust Fund. Republicans are demanding spending cuts to cover the cost and Democrats want to pay for it by closing some tax breaks for the wealthy.

Analysts say House Republicans, who are skeptical about the stimulative impact of the tax cut on the economy and only grudgingly agreed to extend it, are concerned about reopening the issue in an election year. They will be vulnerable to a fresh round of attacks by Democrats that they only favor tax cuts for the wealthy, not for the middle class.

Boehner is a man under pressure. He has to address the concerns of his rank-and-file members while ensuring that a compromise deal is struck before Dec. 31. Failure would mean taxes going up by about $1,000 for the average worker, for which House Republicans would likely be blamed.

"With a few days left before Christmas, there is a little time to renegotiate this," said Republican strategist Ron Bonjean. "The Republican leadership knows it will be in a politically difficult position if this were to expire at Christmas time and will likely find a solution soon."

Economists have warned that reverting to the higher payroll tax rate would drain stimulus from an economy struggling to add jobs, making it more vulnerable to the spillover effects of likely recession in debt-stricken Europe.

The Senate bill also extends an expiring jobless benefits program for the long-term unemployed and averts a pay cut in January for doctors treating patients in the Medicare health insurance program for the elderly.

It includes a provision demanded by House Republicans that would force Obama to accelerate a decision on TransCanada Corp's Keystone XL oil pipeline project, which is backed by some labor unions but opposed by environmental groups.

In a conference call with House Republicans on Saturday, Boehner painted this as a victory for House Republicans because Obama had strongly opposed efforts to link Keystone with the payroll tax cut. But the "sweetener" was not enough to quell overwhelming opposition to the Senate bill.

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